- Melbourne Law School - Research Publications
Melbourne Law School - Research Publications
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ItemMANDATORY DATA BREACH NOTIFICATION LAWS AND AUSTRALIAN HEALTH DATA PRIVACY: FRAGMENTS AND FAULT LINESPrictor, M (Monash University, 2021)Data privacy breaches — unauthorised access to, disclosure, or loss of people’s personal information — are commonplace, particularly in the health sector. In Australia, provisions under the Privacy Act 1988 (Cth) and the My Health Records Act 2012 (Cth) require data breach notification to affected people and the regulator. However, this mandatory notification, as it pertains to health information, has two key problems: fragmentation, and lack of fitness for purpose. In this article, I analyse the goals of the Australian legislative developments and the extent to which these are met in relation to health data. I propose legal and procedural reforms to mend the fragments and fault lines so that breach notification can more effectively address healthcare data breaches in Australia.
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ItemRegulating LibraZetzsche, DA ; Buckley, RP ; Arner, DW (OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2021-03-01)Libra is the first private cryptocurrency with the potential to change the landscape of global payment and monetary systems. Due to the scale and reach provided by its affiliation with Facebook, the question is not whether, but how, to regulate it. This article introduces the Libra project and analyses the potential responses open to regulators worldwide. We conclude that perhaps the greatest impact will come not from Libra itself, but rather from reactions to it, particularly by other BigTechs, incumbent financial institutions and governments around the world.
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ItemCriminal Liability for "Wage Theft": A Regulatory Panacea?Hardy, T ; Howe, J ; Kennedy, M (Monash University, 2021)In response to concerns over the growing problem of ‘wage theft’, the federal government, as well as various state governments, have committed to introducing criminal sanctions for underpayment contraventions. While policymakers and the public have largely assumed that criminal sanctions will address a perceived deterrence gap and promote employer compliance with basic employment standards, there has been far less scholarly appraisal of how this regulatory shift might shape enforcement decisions and affect compliance outcomes. Drawing on literature from criminology, as well as regulation and governance, this article evaluates a range of conceptual justifications put forward in support of criminalising certain forms of wage theft. It also considers key practical issues which may arise in a dual track system where both criminal and civil sanctions are available for the same or similar contraventions. This article concludes with some suggestions on how criminal offences might be framed in the federal system so as to optimise employer compliance and reduce regulatory tensions.
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ItemExploring separated fathers' understandings and experiences of 'home' and homemakingCampo, M ; Fehlberg, B ; Natalier, K ; Smyth, BM (ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2021-07-03)This paper considers fathers’ understandings and experiences of home after relationship separation–an issue that has received little research attention to date–through interviews with four separated fathers conducted as part of a larger qualitative study. Key themes to emerge were: the significance attached by participant fathers to home and homemaking through their focus on everyday interactions; the concern that their home might be viewed by children as secondary; and a sense of the vulnerability and transience of home arising from their children’s presence and absence. Viewed overall, the fathers in this study conveyed their determination to offer their children a loving, stable, and secure home life as a fundamental dimension of their commitment to post-separation fathering while also describing key challenges they experienced in doing so.
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ItemThe meaning of home for children and parents after parental separation: Recent insights from a qualitative studyFehlberg, B ; Campo, M ; Smyth, B ; Natalier, K (LexisNexis Australia, 2021)In this article, we draw on our recent study on the meaning of home for children and young people in separated families to offer some insights of relevance to Australian post-separation parenting law and practice. We identify the centrality of relationships, safety, and economic resources in shaping home. Our project findings convey the importance of listening to what children and young people — and their parents — say about home and homemaking after parental separation as a way of shedding light on what is most needed to support their adjustment and encouraging greater child focus when parenting arrangements are made.
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ItemCOVID-19: PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY POWERS AND ACCOUNTABILITY MECHANISMS IN AUSTRALIAO'Brien, P ; Waters, E (THOMSON REUTERS AUSTRALIA LTD, 2021-01-01)During the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia, governments in all jurisdictions (except New South Wales) have declared states of emergency and exercised powers under their public health emergency legislation. Highly restrictive measures have been introduced pursuant to the exercise of such powers. Extraordinary government action demands strong accountability. This section piece reviews the public health emergency legislation in all Australian jurisdictions and finds that inadequate accountability mechanisms are embedded in the statutes. This section piece demonstrates that there is insufficient transparency around the decisions being made by the Executive under the public health emergency powers. The section piece also reveals that there are very few options built into the public health emergency legislation for review of executive action for its legality, meritoriousness and fairness.
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ItemNo Preview AvailableMissing in Action: The Global Strategy to Reduce the Harmful Use of Alcohol and the WTOO'brien, P (CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, 2021-06-01)This article addresses the question of how the World Health Organization (WHO) Global Strategy to Reduce the Harmful Use of Alcohol (Global Strategy) and its Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) have been used in the context of discussions about alcohol and tobacco measures, respectively, in the World Trade Organization (WTO) Committee on Technical Barriers to Trade. The article finds considerable differences not only in the extent to which the FCTC is used compared to the Global Strategy , but also in the ways in which the two global health instruments have been used in the WTO context. The article proffers three key reasons for these differences: the legal status of the instrument; the content of the instrument in terms of whether it contains guidance as to the use of detailed, evidence-based measures; and the role and legitimacy that the instrument accords to the relevant industry interests. The article considers how the insights from the research can inform the developments in global governance of alcohol that are underway in WHO policy. It also positions its findings in terms of the wider international law debates about hard law versus soft law, and whether different types of international regulatory instruments and the legal status of these instruments impact their effectiveness in supporting domestic public health measures.
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ItemNo Preview AvailablePublic Health and the Global Governance of AlcoholO'brien, P (CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, 2021-06-01)
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ItemNo Preview AvailableInternal audit stigma impairs internal audit outcomesEulerich, M ; Kremin, J ; Saunders, KK ; Wood, DA (Virtus Interpress, 2021)Prior research finds that the internal audit function (IAF) plays a critical role in organizations, yet there is still a stigma toward the profession. We examine how this stigma affects internal audit outcomes, using three different data sources: survey results from parts of Europe (113 observations) and the United States (124 observations) for the year 2017 and an experiment (65 observations) in 2018. We find that when internal auditors in parts of Europe and the U.S. believe there is a negative stigma about internal auditing, they report negative work outcomes, including less ability to add value, less influence in the organization, more resistance to implementing their recommendations, and more pressure to change audit findings. Our experimental results confirm the survey findings and provide further evidence that negative stigma causes participants to perceive less value in internal audit reports and that internal audit recommendations are less influential in decision-making. Taken together, the results suggest that negative perceptions of internal audit have a significant impact on the profession
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ItemNo Preview AvailableCOVID-19 and the Australian labour market: how did older Australians fare during 2020?Fry, J ; Temple, J ; McDonald, P ; Blackham, A (Australian Population Studies, 2021)Background In analysing the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the labour market, attention has focussed on younger people, leaving a research gap when it comes to outcomes for older Australians aged 50 years or over, in terms of employment, unemployment, underemployment and hours worked. Aims To describe levels of labour force participation, unemployment, underemployment, and hours worked by older workers and job seekers during 2020. Data and methods Using Australian Bureau of Statistics data, we perform descriptive analyses of variations in labour market outcomes by geographic areas, public and private sector employment, industry of employment and demographic characteristics. Results Older employment fell in April but recovered by December. As the full-time share initially increased, average hours worked decreased due to reductions in hours offered to workers, increasing the underemployment rate. There was little recovery of employment in metropolitan Melbourne due to prolonged lockdown conditions. Of the largest industries, retail trade and manufacturing were worst affected.